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Kathy Boyer

Penn Veterinary Medecine CAL - 1 views

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    Veterinary animal images
Kathy Boyer

Canine and Equine Veterinary Physiotherapy Training - 0 views

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    pt veterinary Physiotherapy course
Kathy Boyer

Veterinary Anatomy Directions and Planes - 0 views

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    Veterinary directional anatomical terminology
Kathy Boyer

http://www.wava-amav.org/Downloads/nav_2005.pdf - 0 views

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    Veterinary Anatomical Terms
Kathy Boyer

The Horse | How Your Horse Sees (video) - 0 views

    • Kathy Boyer
       
      Great video. How much is the horses field of vision?
  • Dr. Sharon Spier, U.C. Davis, Calif., explains horses' vision;
Kathy Boyer

Where Does My Horse Hurt? | Helping you help your horse - 0 views

  • One of the most frustrating things my clients face is not knowing how to help their horse— whether the problem is physical, behavioral or related to performance. Do you call the vet? Trainer? Farrier? Psychic? Do you need a new saddle, training video, feed change or titanium shoes? Where can you go to find the answers?
Kathy Boyer

The Horse | Physical Therapy for Stifle Problems in Horses (AAEP 2011) - 2 views

  • Brooks described her physical therapy approach for restoring strength and coordination to horses with intermittent upward fixation of the patella or other hind-limb weakness issues at the 2011 American Association of Equine Practitioners convention, held Nov. 18-22 in San Antonio, Texas. “Treatment of both intermittent upward fixation of the patella in horses and anterior knee pain in humans involves client education, increase in activity level, a stretching program, and an ascending therapeutic strengthening exercise progression,” she said. “A thorough veterinary examination should first clear the horse for physical therapy treatment referral. Horses recovering from injuries, surgery, or systemic diseases are appropriate for this program.” Brooks said owners often report that affected horses are clumsy, frequently stumble, trip, get their hind legs stuck behind them, have a hind limb that gives out or collapses, and/or have an audible click or pop when shifting weight on or off of the involved leg(s). She also noted that affected horses tend to be overweight (body condition score 6 or higher on a scale of 1 to 9), have weak abdominal and/or topline muscles, generalized deconditioning, and atrophied (muscle wasting in) hind end muscles. The patellae (knee caps) might also visibly jump when the horse initiates a weight shift or steps forward.
    • Kathy Boyer
       
      Details of the patella
Kathy Boyer

Horses Inside Out Homepage Gillian Higgins - 1 views

    • Kathy Boyer
       
      The biomechanics course was brilliant. We looked at both horses biomechanics and also how rider position can affect the horses movement
  • for horse owners in Massage, Pilates or applied anatomy are held in Leicestershire or can be arranged at your yard.
    • Kathy Boyer
       
      horse owners courses
Kathy Boyer

Equine Lameness - 0 views

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    Identifying lamness in the Horse
Kathy Boyer

The Equine - Muscles - 0 views

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    Some of the deep and superficial muscles in the Equid
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